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123<br />

Some adverbs of manner are phrases consisting of noon<br />

'in a manner, with' or beu 'in a manner, DES' and<br />

adjectives. The phrases with beu are usually used in<br />

imperatives.<br />

ii-duek ng'bn got keudeh 'he is sitting in a proper<br />

manner'<br />

Ion-mat nqbn kbnq keudeh 'I held it tight'<br />

duek beu q'ot 'sit well (correctly)'<br />

dong beu cot 'stand upright'<br />

Some adverbs of manner are formed with meu- 'like' and<br />

the three bound forms of demonstratives given in (2.4.2,<br />

i,a) .<br />

meunoe 'like this'<br />

msmiaji 'like that'<br />

meudeh 'like that'<br />

m S 0*<br />

130. 'Oh lon-peugah meunoe, bek ka-peugah meudeh.<br />

When 1-say like-this don't 2y-say like-that<br />

'When I say like this, don't say like that. (Don't<br />

argue too much.)'<br />

The following adverbs are from the "tu-words". kri<br />

'manner,' ban 'manner,' and 'oJi 'manner,' formed with<br />

beurangka- 'any' and meu- 'known.'<br />

beurangkakri 'in any manner'<br />

beurangkaban 'in any manner' (also: 'in any shape')

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